## One Piece Chapter 391, pages 13-15: A Girl Called Demon - Chapter: 391 - Pages: 13-15 - Characters: Nico Robin, Ohara children, Ohara villagers, Roji ### Summary Page 13: Eight-year-old Nico Robin finally uses her Hana Hana ability to stop the children, sprouting hands around them with a "Fshh..." sound. The children scream, "Eeeen, she's creepy!!!" and "Waaah, the monster attacked us!!" Robin stands alone and silent, labeled on the page as "Nico Robin, Age 8." An adult confronts her: "Hey, you." Then the accusation comes: "My kids told me they were beaten up for no reason... Don't go anywhere near my kids. You're such a creepy girl!!" When the adult says, "Well, say something," Robin still only looks down. Her power lets her defend herself, but it also makes every accusation stick harder. Page 14: Robin walks through Ohara and sees ordinary families around her. A smiling child asks, "What's for dinner tonight?" and another adult says, "Well, what do you think?" Robin passes a window where a family laughs together, then sees another child walking hand in hand with parents. Someone points at her and says, "Ah... Mama, she's the one, the monster girl!" The parent responds, "Don't point at her...!!" Robin keeps walking with her book, isolated in the middle of a town full of homes. The page shows that her loneliness is not only from open bullying; it is also from watching everyone else belong somewhere. Page 15: Robin returns to the house and says, "I'm home. I'm sorry for coming back so late." She calls, "Roji-oba-san?" but no warmth answers. Instead, notes have been left for her. One says, "To Robin, It's your daughter's birthday today, so we've decided to have a private dinner, with no outsiders." Another tells her, "We have some bread, so eat that for your dinner." Others order, "When you're done with your dinner," "Don't use too much jam though," and "always wipe down and fix your drawers." Robin quietly eats bread alone at the table. Her aunt's household does not treat her like a child coming home; it treats her like an inconvenience to be managed.